Tehran Monorail Project Started

(Wikipedia) - Despite overwhelming criticism of the project, a project to build the first phase of Tehran Monorail officially began on March 17, 2004. Phase one comprised of a 6 km line with six stations: Sadeghiyeh Square, Tehran Metro (Green line), Apadana Complex, West Tehran Bus Terminal, Azadi Square, Mehrabad Airport. Phase Two would include a loop back to Sadeghiyeh through Ekbatan Complex, and expand the line to 12 km.In 2004, when the project was started by then Tehran Mayor, Ahmadinejad, it had not received the approval of the High Traffic Council; a body in charge of studying and approving transport plans. This resulted in the disqualification of the monorail from any state assistance. In 2007 provincial budget, a sum of 82 Billion Rials was dedicated to the completion for the Monorail by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's administration. The Monorail was not supported by Tehran mayor Ghalibaf, and the ex head of Tehran Metro, Mr. Hashemi, who wanted the Monorail budget to be allocated to expansion of Metro lines. This caused a row between the Ahmadinejad's government and Tehran Municipality for a while.In September 2007, Iran Daily reported that the Tehran monorail project will become operational by 2011. This was quoted by the Deputy Interior Minister for development affairs. It further added that the monorail lines would extend across the capital, the Persian daily Iran Newspaper reported. He continued that the routes for monorail lines in the metropolis have been specified as follows: from Basij Square in the southeast to Tehran Pars in the northeast, from Tehran Pars to Pounak Square in the northwest, from Pounak to Nematabad in the south and from Nematabad to Basij Square again.The concept of constructing a monorail in Iran was first proposed in 1976 before the Iranian Revolution. Then the mayor of Tehran, Shahrestani, eventually scrapped the project after repeated specialist consultations indicated that a monorail network would not ease traffic in the city in a significant fashion. At the time the general conclusion was that it would create more problems than solutions.In 2002, Tehran Mayor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad declared his intent to develop a monorail system for the capital despite the numerous warnings by transport and traffic experts. The monorail project was expected to cost 135 million Euros for 12 km and three stations.The largest criticism of the project lay in its heavy costs on the already cash strapped Tehran City. Furthermore, a large part of criticism is directed towards the plan's geographical mapping. According to those who have had access to the initial sketch, the selected route is less crowded, making the project, in their view, unjustifiable. Among opponents of the Monorail plan was Ali Asghar Ardakanian, a member of the Transport Engineering Society who believed that Iran lacked the pre-requisite skills and knowledge to maintain and run the system. Ardakanian also insisted that the government plan was poorly thought out and failed to take into account the affiliated expenses for maintaining the monorail's underground and surface structures — thus creating funding forecast problems for the future. Additionally, relative to cost, critics point out that the passenger capacity of the monorail is 10 times less than the Tehran Metro.Supporters of the Tehran Monorail were commonly heard declaring that the development of the project would be significantly faster than other transport project due to its nature.The Tehran Monorail project was cancelled in April 2010, with only 3% completed.